Medvedev commits to Friday pull out

August 20, 2008 12:00 am

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By , MOSCOW, August 20 – President Dmitry Medvedev has issued a fresh commitment to withdraw almost all Russian troops from Georgia before the weekend as NATO-Russia relations plunged to their lowest ebb in years.

In New York, France submitted a new draft resolution to the UN Security Council demanding full compliance with the Georgia ceasefire including a full Russian troop withdrawal, but Russia Tuesday said it was not acceptable.

In a telephone conversation with French counterpart and current European Union President Nicolas Sarkozy, Medvedev vowed that all but 500 Russian troops would be pulled out of the former Soviet republic on Thursday and Friday.

As Western criticism intensified over the further delay in the Russian withdrawal — it had promised that the pullback would start Monday — tensions between Russia and NATO began to boil over.

Moscow pulled its navy out of joint exercises with the alliance, while NATO declared that "business as usual" with the Russians would not be possible until Russia had honoured its promises.

He accused NATO of trying to rescue what he called the "criminal regime" of Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili, a close Western ally who is pushing hard to win his country membership in the alliance.

"It appears to me that NATO is trying to portray the aggressor as the victim, to whitewash a criminal regime and to save a failing regime," Lavrov said.

Russian troops were sent in on August 8 to repel Georgia’s attempt to retake control of South Ossetia, a tiny province on the mountainous Georgian-Russian border dominated by Moscow-backed separatists.

They proceeded to rout Georgia’s army and occupy large swathes of the country before agreeing to a French-brokered ceasefire one week ago.

Under the deal, combat troops must pull out but an unspecified number of soldiers can remain as "peacekeepers", although there is little clarity on their mandate or their scope of operations.

"President Medvedev announced to Sarkozy that the withdrawal of Russian troops will be concluded August 21-22, with the exception of a team of 500 personnel charged with implementing additional security measures under article five of the August 12 agreement," a statement from the French presidency said.

Meanwhile the draft UN text, debated during an emergency council meeting, "demands full and immediate compliance with the ceasefire to which the parties have subscribed."

Circulated by France on behalf of European members and with US support, the draft also "demands the immediate withdrawal of Russian forces to the lines held prior to the outbreak of hostilities (on August 7) and the return of Georgian forces to their usual bases."

It would also reaffirm "the commitment of all member states to the sovereignty, independence and territorial integrity of Georgia within its internationally recognized borders."

But Russia’s UN ambassador Vitaly Churkin, whose country is a veto-wielding Security Council member, made it clear that his delegation would not accept the text because it included only two of the six points listed in the peace deal brokered by Sarkozy.

In Brussels, NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer accused Russia of failing to respect the peace plan requiring both sides to move troops back to their positions before the original Georgian offensive.

This "is not happening at the moment," the NATO chief said at an emergency meeting of the bloc’s foreign ministers.

US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, attending the NATO meeting, said Russia was entirely to blame for its growing diplomatic isolation in the West.

"It’s becoming more and more the outlaw in this conflict," she said in an interview with US network CBS News.

She said Moscow was isolating itself by "invading smaller neighbours, bombing civilian infrastructure, going into villages and wreaking havoc and (carrying out) the wanton destruction of (Georgia’s) infrastructure."

Meanwhile in Georgia, Russian commanders insisted they had started to withdraw combat troops, but there was little evidence to support the statements.

Seven armoured vehicles and three tanks were seen leaving the town of Gori, which formerly housed a key Georgian army base near South Ossetia.

A senior Georgian official dismissed the Gori pull-out as "a show aimed at creating the illusion of a withdrawal."

Russian tanks and checkpoints controlled the road to Gori and journalists coming from the capital Tbilisi were denied access to the town.

The Georgian military also complained that Russian forces on Tuesday detained 21 Georgian soldiers in the western port city of Poti, which has been raided repeatedly by the Russians since the ceasefire.

In a rare gesture of goodwill, 15 Georgian and five Russian prisoners were exchanged at a checkpoint near Tbilisi.